Along with Gary and Kevin. Not in the 400, though, alas.
Author Archive | Roderick
The Use of Knowledge In Society
I recently came across two interesting articles by Rabah Benkemoune. Unfortunately, theyre not accessible for free unless you have university access in which case you can read Charles Dunoyer and the Emergence of the Idea of an Economic Cycle and Gustave de Molinari’s Bourse Network Theory: A Liberal Response to Sismondis Informational Problem.
Benkemounes thesis is that Dunoyer and Molinari were among the few 19th-century French liberal theorists to take seriously Sismondis argument that governmental regulation is needed because informational problems pose an insuperable obstacle to the markets ability to equilibrate. While most liberals in the Say tradition dismissed Sismondi by insisting that markets would equilibrate just fine were it not for government intervention, Dunoyer and Molinari agreed with Sismondi that there are genuine informational problems (including, for Dunoyer, a business cycle) inherent in even the freest market, but rejected Sismondis proposed legislative solution.
Instead, Dunoyer and Molinari argued that: a) the informational problems were in large part remediable by non-governmental means, whether education or institutional innovation (the latter including, for Molinari, informational networks such as his idea of labour-exchanges); b) to the extent that such problems are not remediable, they can be expected to be fairly mild in a genuinely free market; c) any attempted governmental solutions would face even greater informational problems.
Benkemoune also includes some discussion of Dunoyers and Molinaris relationship to the Austrian school.
In related news, Annelien de Dijns recent book French Political Thought from Montesquieu to Tocqueville: Liberty in a Levelled Society? includes a fair bit of discussion of Dunoyer and the Censeur group. (Amazon offers the book at a hefty price, but its not hard to find the entire text for free online if you poke about a bit.)
Its nice to see the industriels getting more scholarly attention.
You May Ask Yourself, How Do I Work This?
Apparently this guy only ever learned one way of opening doors. (CHT Stacy Litz.) Good thing that there were others on hand who could draw on a broader range of life experience to help him out.
Preserved in JARS
The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies now has online archives. Here, selfishly (appropriately), is a list of links to my own JARS articles over the past decade:
The Benefits and Hazards of Dialectical Libertarianism (2.2, Spring 2001)
Keeping Context In Context: The Limits of Dialectics (3.2, Spring 2002)
Praxeology: Who Needs It (6.2, Spring 2005)
Reference and Necessity: A Rand-Kripke Synthesis? (7.1, Fall 2005)
A Beauty Contest For Dichotomies: Brownes Terminological Revolutions (8.1, Fall 2006)
Interpreting Platos Dialogues: Aristotle versus Seddon (10.1, Fall 2008)
Most of those were my side of debates with other people, so you should probably go read their side too. Plus lots of other good stuff. Here.
Cordial and Sanguine, Part 9
Charles Johnsons post on Libertarian Anticapitalism is up at BHL.
Inbound Nation
As the domain for the Libertarian Nation Foundations former website has lapsed into enterprising but alien hands, Ive decided to resurrect the LNF site as a subdomain on my own website: praxeology.net/libertariannation. For now, most of the links still point to the archived versions of the relevant pages, but Ive got the first issue of Formulations transferred over now. More to follow!

